
🎯 The Short Answer: A good way to find a research topic is to start with a broad area that genuinely interests you, and then look for gaps in recent research (the literature). You can also align with your advisor’s interests or build on past coursework to help narrow things down.

Choosing a research topic can feel overwhelming, especially if this is your first big research project. It might seem like you’re deciding the direction of your entire career in one go. The good news is, you’re not. In this post, we’ll walk through a few practical steps that you can follow to identify a research topic that’s realistic, interesting, and doable.
🧠 Lower The Pressure First
Before you brainstorm ideas, take a step back. Many students believe their dissertation has to be the most important piece of research they’ll ever produce. That mindset creates unnecessary pressure and often leads to analysis paralysis.
Your dissertation is likely your first major independent research project, not your last. Its purpose is to show that you can conduct rigorous research, apply the right methods, and contribute something meaningful. However, it doesn’t have to revolutionise your field. When you ease that pressure, it becomes much easier to choose a workable research topic.

🔥 Start With What Interests You
You’ll spend months, and possibly years, reading, writing, and thinking about your chosen research topic. If you’re not genuinely interested in it, staying motivated will be tough. So start by asking yourself a simple question: What do I actually want to learn more about?
Think about lectures you enjoyed, debates that caught your attention, or issues in your workplace that frustrate or fascinate you. For example, if you’re doing an MBA and you’ve always been curious about employee burnout in remote teams, that curiosity could form the foundation of a solid research topic. Interest fuels persistence, and persistence gets dissertations finished.
This is something we see often in our private coaching sessions. When students pick topics based purely on what “sounds impressive,” they tend to lose steam halfway through. When the topic connects to a real curiosity or career goal, they’re far more likely to follow through.

🎓 Align With Your Advisor
The next step is to look at your advisor’s research interests (or those of your desired advisor, if they haven’t yet been assigned to you). What have they published on? What themes keep appearing in their work? Aligning your research topic with your advisor’s expertise can be a smart move.
Why? Because supervisors are usually more engaged when the topic overlaps with their own interests. They’re likely to have existing resources, datasets, or reading lists you can tap into. They’ll also be more confident (and interested!) guiding you through the process, which means better feedback and fewer delays.
This doesn’t mean you should choose something you dislike just to please your advisor. Instead, look for overlap between what interests you and what they already know well. That sweet spot can make your research journey much smoother.

📚 Revisit Your Coursework
Your past assignments are a goldmine of potential ideas. Throughout your coursework, you’ve already explored various topics, theories, and case studies. Some of those papers likely sparked questions you didn’t have time to answer fully.
Go back and review your highest-graded or most enjoyable assignments. Ask yourself: What unanswered questions came up? Were there limitations in the studies you reviewed? Did you notice gaps in the literature?
For example, maybe you wrote a paper on leadership styles in healthcare but noticed that most studies focused on large urban hospitals. That observation could lead to a research topic exploring leadership in rural clinics. Building on previous work saves time and gives you a head start because you already understand the basic literature.

🔎 Read Recent Review Studies
Once you have a general area in mind, look for recent systematic reviews, narrative reviews, or meta-analyses in that field. Focus on papers published within the last year or two so you’re seeing the most up-to-date picture.
Review studies summarise what we currently know and, more importantly, what we don’t know. Most of them include a section on recommendations for future research. That section is often packed with ready-made research gaps.
For instance, a review might conclude that while there’s strong evidence about social media use and adolescent anxiety in North America, there’s limited research in developing countries. That gap could point you toward a clear and relevant research topic without having to reinvent the wheel.

🌍 Pro Tip: Use A Context Gap
One of the simplest ways to identify a strong research topic is to apply existing research to a new context. This is known as using a context gap. Instead of creating an entirely new theory, you test or explore an existing idea in a different setting.
For example, imagine a well-designed study examined remote work productivity in large US tech companies. You might replicate or adapt that study in small businesses in your own country. The core idea stays the same, but the context changes.
This approach is practical and manageable, especially for first-time researchers. You’re building on proven foundations while still contributing something original. It’s a smart way to balance ambition with feasibility.

📌 Key Takeaways
- Lower the pressure. Your dissertation is an important step, not the final word in your career.
- Choose a research topic that genuinely interests you to stay motivated long term.
- Look for overlap between your interests and your advisor’s expertise.
- Revisit past coursework and recent review studies to uncover research gaps.
- Consider using a context gap to apply existing research in a new setting.
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